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Lipid metabolism Lipids: Are heterogeneous group of compounds related to the fatty acids. Lipids are biological molecules that are insoluble in aqueous solutions and soluble in organic solvents (ether, chloroform, and benzene), therefore, physical properties reflect the hydrophobic nature of their structures. Lipid functions: 1.They serve as structural components of biological membranes (controls the flow of materials in and out of the cell (barrier). 2.They provide energy reserves, predominantly in the form of triacylglycerols. 3. Both lipids and lipid derivatives serve as hormones. 4.Interactions with vitamins, assist in the regulation of biological processes. 5.Lipophilic bile acids aid in lipid solubilization. Classification of lipids: 1.Simple lipids: is ester of fatty acids(F.A) with alcohol include: -Fats: ester of fatty acids with tri hydroxic alcohol (glycerol). - Ester of F.A.( saturated ) with glycerol called fats (solid). - Ester of F.A.( unsaturated ) with glycerol called oils (liquid). 2.Waxes: ester of F.A. with higher molecular weight monohydric alcohol (e.g.: insect secretions) 3.Complex lipids : ester of fatty acid -containing groups in addition to fatty acid and alcohol , include: a.Phospholipids: b.Glycolipid: c.Other complex lipids like sulfolipids, aminolipids, and lipoproteins d. Precursor and derived lipids : these include fatty acids , glycerol , ketone bodies, cholesterol and glycerides. Blood lipids Blood lipids (or blood fats) are lipids in the blood, either free or bound to other molecules. They are mostly transported in a protein capsule, the concentration of blood lipids depends on intake and excretion from the intestine, and uptake and secretion from cells. Blood lipids are mainly fatty acids and cholesterol. Hyperlipidemia is the presence of elevated or abnormal levels of lipids and/or lipoproteins in the blood, and is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease. A blood test called a complete lipid profile is done. It is recommended that this test be done after an overnight fast. An excess amount of blood lipids can cause fat deposits in the artery walls, increasing the risk for heart disease. Healthy lipid levels 1- total cholesterol should be less than 200 2- HDL cholesterol should be 40 or higher 3- LDL cholesterol should be less than 100. 4- triglyceride level should be less than 150 If the lipids are not at the right levels, what can be done to improve them? 1- follow a diet low in saturated fats and cholesterol. 2- In some cases,it may also need to take a medication to help lower the lipid levels. Body stores of fat Fats and Energy: Protein, carbohydrates and fats are the three essential nutrients that provide the body with caloric energy. Fats are the most energy dense of these nutrients. Containing 9 kcal per gram, fats provide roughly twice as much energy and calories as proteins and carbohydrates which only provide 4 kcal per gram. This energy is used for exercising and for basic biological processes, known as the basal metabolic rate, that the body performs while at rest. These include functions like blood circulation, the regulation of hormones, cell growth and digestion. Any calories that are not immediately metabolized for energy are stored in the body as fat for future use. Adipocytes: Fat is stored throughout the body in fat cells known as adipocytes. However, fat cells can increase and decrease in size depending on the amount of fat that the body is storing. If the body stores more fat then it uses, the fat cells will expand causing weight gain. If the body is forced to rely on stored fat reserves for energy, whether because of diet or exercise, the fat cells will shrink causing weight loss. Fatty acids 1- Are aliphatic carboxylic acids mostly obtained from the hydrolysis of natural fats and oils. 2- Fatty acids that occur in natural fats usually contain an even number of carbon atoms, because they are synthesized from 2 carbon units and are straight-chain derivatives. The chain may be saturated (containing no double bonds), or unsaturated (containing one or more double bonds). 3- At physiological pH, the carboxyl group is readily ionized, rendering a negative charge onto fatty acids in bodily fluids, therefore F.A. are weak acids. a- Monounsaturated …(one double bond), b- Polyunsaturated .(2 or more of double bonds ).The most important of polyunsaturated fatty acids are the Essential Fatty Acids(EFAs). The EFAs are those fatty acids that are required in human body but cannot be synthesized in it, so must be supplied in the diet to support the growth and include: Linoleic acid C18, 2 double bonds Linolenic acid C18, 3 double bonds Arachidonic acid C20, 4 double bonds The absolute EFAs are the linoleic acid, the precursor of arachidonic acid that is a substrate for Prostaglandins synthesis and the Linolenic acid, the precursor for other ω-3 fatty acids formula important for growth and development. These EFAs are important components of phospholipids of cell membrane and mitochondrial membrane. Eicosanoids Extremely powerful hormone like molecules but are not hormones rather autocrine linoleic acid regulators. Derived from arachidonic acid which is synthesized from linoleic acid by adding a two carbon unit and additional double bonds, there are three types of ecosanoids: •Prostaglandins: (pain, fever, ovulation, uterine contraction, gastric secretion inhibition) •Thromboxanes: possess a cyclic ether in their structures; TxA2 is the most prominent member of this group and is primarily produced by platelet (clotting). •Leukotrines: are cause fluid leakage from blood vessels to inflamed area. Triglyceride; TG (Triacylglycerol):Are fatty acid ester of glycerol alcohol; 3 fatty acids+ Glycerol. Diglyceride; 2 fatty acids+ Glycerol. Monoglycride: 1 fatty acid+ Glycerol. TG represents (its function) the principal storage form of energy in adipose tissues that needed physiologically in prolonged fasting and starvation and pathologically, for example in uncontrolled diabetes mellitus. Triglycerides undergo lipolysis (hydrolysis by lipases) and are broken down into glycerol and FA. Once released into the blood, FFA bind to serum albumin for transport to tissues that require energy. The glycerol also enters the bloodstream and is absorbed by the liver or kidney where it is converted to glycerol 3phosphate by the enzyme glycerol kinase. Hepatic glycerol 3-phosphate is mostly converted into dihydroxyacetone (DHAP) and then glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate to rejoin the glycolysis and gluconeogenesis pathway. Properties of F.A.: fatty acids are weak acids and dissociate in solution as RCOOH ↔ RCOO‾ + H‾ . Boiling points and melting points of fatty acids rise with increase of chain length. In general, saturated F.A. of more than 10 C-atoms are solids at room temperature, In unsaturated F.A. the melting point is greatly lowered and solubility in non-polar solvents is enhanced with increase the number of double bonds. Phospholipids These lipids also composed of Fatty acids(R) and Glycerol as TG, but also phosphoric acid(PO4) and nitrogen base. These two latter structures(PO4 and nitrogen base) confer the PL compounds the relative polarity and so their function in CM and mitochondrial membrane structures. PLs are also reffered to as amphipathic compounds because of their formation from polar(PO4 and nitrogen base) and nonpolar(fatty acids) structures. Sphingolipids These are also PL but differ from phosphoglycerolipids in their structure: They are composed of Sphingosine alcohol instead of Glycerol. Sphingosine+fatty acid=Ceramide Ceramide+Nitrogen base= sphingolipid. Of the most significant type of these PL in humans is sphingomyelin in which the base is choline. It is an important component of myelin sheath of nerve fibers, insulates and protects neuronal fibers of the central nervous system. Glycolipids: Ceramide+ carbohydrate moity(or moities)=Glycolipids. Of which : the simple forms are glucosylsphingolipid and galactosylsphingolipid(only one unit of CHO). The complex forms are Globoside and Gangalioside(2-9 units of CHO). Cholesterol : Is anthor form of lipid called sterols. Cholesterol is the major sterol in humans. It is cycloaliphatic carbon chain C27. It is present in blood in two forms: Free chol.(1/3) and Esterified chol.(2/3). Total chol. Represents the two forms: The free form is relatively polar because of free OH group at C3, while the esterified form is nonpolar because the free OH is occupied by acyl group(fatty acid RCOO) . Cholesterol is the precursor for synthesis of many vital substances: Male and Female sex hormones (Androgen such as testosterone and Estrogen, E2 ), vitamin D, Cortisol and aldosterone hormones. Cholesterol synthesis: Sources of cholesterol: 1- Dietary intake: Most cells derive their cholesterol from LDL or HDL. 2- De novo synthesis: Occurs in the liver, where cholesterol is synthesized from acetylCoA in cytoplasm. The sequential steps of formation of cholesterol 1- AcetylCoA (2 C): Citrate shuttle shifts mitochondrial Acetyl-CoA into cytoplasm. 2- AcetoacetylCoA (4 C): Action of 3-Hydroxy-3-MethylGlutaryl (HMG) – CoA synthase (cytoplas). 3- HMG CoA (6 C): a- Action of HMG-CoA reductase (rate-limiting enzyme of the mevalonate pathway, the metabolic pathway that produces cholesterol and other isoprenoids. b- Inhibited by: Statins, Glucagon, Cholesterol. c- Activated by: Insulin. 4- Mevalonate (6 C): Pyrophyosphorylation. 5- Pyrophosphomevalonate (6 C): Decarboxylation. 6- Dimethylallyl Isopentanyl pyrophosphate (5 C): Isomerization 7- Dimethylallyl pyrophosphate (5 C): Addition of isopentanyl pyrophosphate (5 C). 8- Geranyl pyrophosphate (10 C): Addition of isopentanyl pyrophosphate (5C). 9- Farnesyl pyrophosphate (15 C) A- Action of Squalene synthase (2 X Franesyl pyrophosphate ). B- NADPH required. C- Franesyl PPi is important for: a- Synthesis of CoQ (Electron Transport Chain). b- Synthesis of Dolichol PPi for N-linked glycosylation of proteins. c- Prenylation of proteins (post-translational modification). 10- Squalene (30 C): a- Action of Squalene epoxidase. b- NADPH required 11- Lanosterol (30 C): Series of 19 reactions 12- Cholesterol (27 C): a- Component of cell membrane. b- Steroid synthesis. c- Vitamin D synthesis. d- Bile acid synthesis. β-oxidation of Fatty Acids: Fatty acid β-oxidation is a multistep process by which fatty acids are broken down by various tissues to produce energy. Fatty acid β-oxidation is major metabolic pathway that is responsible for the mitochondrial breakdown of long-chain acyl-CoA to acetyl-CoA in the cytosol in prokaryotes and in the mitochondria in eukaryotes. Acetyl-CoA enters the citric acid cycle, and NADH and FADH2, which are co-enzymes used in the electron transport chain. It is named as such because the beta carbon of the fatty acid undergoes oxidation to a carbonyl group. It requires a set of enzymes. The oxidation is so called because the β carbon is oxidized during the oxidation process. Steps of Beta-Oxidation: The enzyme, acyl-CoA ligase, uses adenosine triphosphate, or ATP, to join a fatty acid with CoA. They form a new molecule called acyl-CoA. It is as acyl-CoA that the fatty acids are able to broken down in the mitochondrial matrix. There are four main steps—or acts—in beta-oxidation: 1- Loss of hydrogens 2- Addition of water 3- Loss of another hydrogen 4- Addition of another CoA Figure 1. Fatty Acid Oxidation Overview Phospholipid Biosynthesis: Phospholipids are a class of lipids that consist of two fatty acyl molecules esterified at the sn-1 and sn-2 positions of glycerol, and contain a head group linked by a phosphate residue at the sn-3 position. Figure 1. Structure and major classes of phospholipids Figure 2. Phospholipid biosynthesis Abbreviations: GPAT, glycerol 3-phosphate acyltransferase; AGPAT, acylglycerol-3acyltransferase; PAP, phosphatidic acid phosphatase; CDS, CDP-diacylglycerol synthase; PA, phosphatidic acid; DAG, diacylglycerol; PC, phosphatidylcholine; PE, phosphatidylethanolamine; TAG, triacylglycerol; PI, phosphatidylinositol; PG, phosphatidylglycerol. ketosis and ketone body formation: Ketosis is a metabolic state in which some of the body's energy supply comes from ketone bodies in the blood. Ketosis is a nutritional process characterised by serum concentrations of ketone bodies over 0.5 mM, with low and stable levels of insulin and blood glucose. It is almost always generalized with hyperketonemia, that is, an elevated level of ketone bodies in the blood throughout the body. Ketone bodies are formed by ketogenesis when liver glycogen stores are depleted (or from metabolising medium-chain triglycerides). The main ketone bodies used for energy are acetoacetate and β-hydroxybutyrate, and the levels of ketone bodies are regulated mainly by insulin and glucagon. Most cells in the body can use both glucose and ketone bodies for fuel, and during ketosis, free fatty acids and glucose synthesis (gluconeogenesis) fuel the remainder. In glycolysis, higher levels of insulin promote storage of body fat and block release of fat from adipose tissues, while in ketosis, fat reserves are readily released and consumed. For this reason, ketosis is sometimes referred to as the body's "fat burning" mode.While ketosis and ketoacidosis are frequently confused with one another, they are certainly not the same. Ketoacidosis is an acute life-threatening condition requiring prompt medical intervention. However, there are situations (such as treatment-resistant epilepsy) where ketosis can be rather beneficial to health. Ketone bodies: Ketone bodies are three water-soluble molecules (acetoacetate, beta-hydroxybutyrate, and their spontaneous breakdown product, acetone) that are produced by the liver from fatty acids during periods of low food intake (fasting), carbohydrate restrictive diets, starvation, prolonged intense exercise, or in untreated (or inadequately treated) type 1 diabetes mellitus. These ketone bodies are readily picked up by the extra-hepatic tissues, and converted into acetyl-CoA which then enters the citric acid cycle and is oxidized in the mitochondria for energy. In the brain, ketone bodies are also used to make acetyl-CoA into long-chain fatty acids. Ketone bodies are produced by the liver under the circumstances listed above (i.e. fasting, starving, low carbohydrate diets, prolonged exercise and untreated type 1 diabetes mellitus) as a result of intense gluconeogenesis, which is the production of glucose from noncarbohydrate sources (not including fatty acids). They are therefore always released into the blood by the liver together with newly produced glucose, after the liver glycogen stores have been depleted. (These glycogen stores are depleted after only 24 hours of fasting). When two acetyl-CoA molecules lose their -CoAs, (or Co-enzyme A groups) they can form a (covalent) dimer called acetoacetate. Beta-hydroxybutyrate is a reduced form of acetoacetate, in which the ketone group is converted into an alcohol (or hydroxyl) group (see illustration on the right). Both are 4-carbon molecules, that can readily be converted back into acetyl-CoA by most tissues of the body, with the notable exception of the liver. Acetone is the decarboxylated form of acetoacetate which cannot be converted back into acetyl-CoA except via detoxification in the liver where it is converted into lactic acid, which can, in turn, be oxidized into pyruvic acid, and only then into acetyl-CoA. Ketone bodies have a characteristic smell, which can easily be detected in the breath of persons in ketosis and ketoacidosis. It is often described as fruity or like nail polish remover (which usually contains acetone or ethyl acetate). Apart from the three endogenous ketone bodies, acetone, acetoacetic acid, and betahydroxybutyric acid,[4] other ketone bodies like beta-ketopentanoate and betahydroxypentanoate may be created as a result of the metabolism of synthetic triglycerides, such as triheptanoin. Ketone Bodies When the level of acetyl CoA from β-oxidation increases in excess of that required for entry into the citric acid cycle, It undergoes ketogenesis in the mitochondria of liver (ketone body synthesis). The three compounds: acetoacetate, β-hydroxybutyrate, and acetone are collectively known as ketone bodies. Causes of Ketosis: 1.Prolonged starvation, depletion of carbohydrate stores results in increased fatty acid oxidation and ketosis. 2.Lactating mothers develop ketosis, if the carbohydrate demands are not met with. 3.Diabetic patients with uncontrolled blood glucose, Lipoproteins: Lipoproteins LPs are spherical structures composed from lipids and. In these structures the water insoluble lipids (TG and esterified cholesterol) are oriented to the core of the spherical LP, while the water soluble lipids(PL, Free chol. and added proteins) are directed to the surface of LP. However, these structures in their later form still relatively insoluble in systemic circulation and need for addition of specific proteins, called apolipoproteins to confer them sufficient water solubility and so transporting in blood. Chylomicron(Exogeneous LP): It is synthesized in small intestine from dietary lipid after being digested and absorbed. Chylomicron composed mainly of TG 90 %, and the remainder are PLs, cholesterol and apoLPs. Because of its low density(large size), Chylomicrons - carry triacylglycerol (fat) from the intestines to the liver and to adipose tissue(exogenous triglyceride). VLDL (Endogeneous pathway): VLDL is also composed mainly of TG but with less amount compared with chylomicron (VLDL contains 55-60 % TG). It contains also apo B100, much amount of PL , cholesterol and apoproteins, so with higher density and smaller size than chylomicron.VLDL synthesized endogeneously in the liver from chylomicron remnant(dietary lipid)?? and from those synthesized in the liver from excess ingested CHO??. VLDL - carry (newly synthesised or endogenous) triacylglycerol from the liver to adipose tissue. Intermediate density lipoprotein IDL Hydrolysis of TG by LPL to produce what is known: IDL. This IDL which is present normally in blood transiently, is composed from equal molar amount of cholesterol and TG, and mainly apo B100 and apo E. IDL - are intermediate between VLDL and LDL. LDL Low Density Lipoprotein: This type of lipid or LP is differentiated from other LPs in its principally forming from cholesterol(free and esterified) and only apo B 100. LDL - carry cholesterol from the liver to cells of the body. Sometimes referred to as the "bad cholesterol" lipoprotein.[LDL] . because of direct correlation between the blood levels of this lipid and the incidence of atherosclerosis; coronary artery diseases(CADs), cerebrovascular disease(CVD), and the peripheral atherosclerosis. HDL High Density Lipoprotein: It is synthesized in the liver and small intestine as disk-shapped containing only PL and apo A II(the predominant apoLP),C and E. HDL - collects cholesterol from the body's tissues, and brings it back to the liver. The inverse relation between the plasma HDL-C and the incidence of CAD (and in general atherosclerosis) made it the Good lipid or LP. Apolipoproteins(apos): Apolipoproteins are protein components of lipoproteins. They have three main functions: a.As structural components, which help stabilize a polar lipids in plasma. b.Apos bind to cell surface receptors, thus determining the sites of cellular uptake and degradation of lipoproteins. c.Apos regulate the activity of enzymes which are involved in lipoprotein metabolism. After digestion of lipids, some changes are happened in intestine for absorption, these are: •Hydrolysis of triglycerides(TG) to free fatty acids(FFA) and mono- acylglycerols. • Solubilization of FFA and monoacylglycerols by detergents (bile acids) and transportation from the intestinal lumen toward the cell surface. • Uptake of FFA and monoacylglycerols into the cell and resynthesis to triglycerides. • Packaging of newly synthesized TG into special lipid- rich globules called chylomicrons. • Exocytosis of chylomicrons from cells and release into lymph. Hyperlipidemia hyperlipoproteinemia or dyslipidemia: is the presence of raised or abnormal levels of lipids and/or lipoproteins in the blood. Lipid and lipoprotein abnormalities are extremely common in the general population, and are regarded as a highly modifiable risk factor for cardiovascular disease ,atherosclerosis. ,acute pancreatitis. Hypercholesterolemia: is the presence of high levels of cholesterol in the blood. It is not a disease but a metabolic derangement that can be secondary to many diseases and can contribute to many forms of disease, most notably cardiovascular disease. It is closely related to the terms. Familial hypercholesterolemia is a rare genetic disorder that can occur in families, where sufferers cannot properly metabolise cholesterol. Hypocholesterolemia: Abnormally low levels of cholesterol, some studies suggest a link with depression, cancer and cerebral hemorrhage. Metabolic Response to Starvation Energy Reserves 1- Liver/muscle glycogen: are sufficient for brief period (<24hr) of fasting – mostly used for emergencies (vigorous exercise). a- Liver can release glucose into blood via Glucose-6-Pase; Muscle must consume its own glycogen 2- Muscle protein: is another possible source but is unfavorable since you would in effect digest your muscles 3- Adipose TG’s: provide the major storage form of readily-available energy – provides FFA’s to liver which makes ketones that are necessary for prolonged starvation. 4- Fuel homeostasis: principally regulates the needs of brain and muscle (major consumers of fuel). a- brain – glucose exclusively (120g/d) until prolonged starvation (~2 days) then switches to ketones (fuel sparing). Metabolic Changes during Starvation Mechanisms of Protein Conservation A- Muscle protein breakdown during starvation provides liver (for gluconeogenesis) and kidney (for ammoniagenesis). B- During 1st days of starvation, amino acids (Ala, Gln) are synthesized and released from muscle - Ala goes to liver for gluconeogenesis - Gln goes to kidney for ammoniagenesis (also yields glucose); or goes to gut and converted to Ala which goes to liver C- As starvation progresses, ammoniagenesis required to maintain acid-base homeostasis rises in kidney (due to increased FFA’s and circulating ketones) which secondarily yields more glucose thus kidney becomes major source of gluconeogen. - By 3 days starvation, brain begins utilizing ketones and skeletal muscle relies on ketones for 50% of its energy. - The switch from glucose to ketone usage aids in reducing the rate of muscle protein degradation needed for gluconeogenesis – if this did not occur, the body would lose >½ of its muscle protein within 17 days leading to death. - By 24 days starvation, ketone synthesis, nitrogen excretion, and gluconeogen (from lactate, glycerol, Gln) reach a steady state allowing starvation to persist for 2 – 3 months. Ketone Body Metabolism 1- Increased availability of FFA’s during starvation provides liver with increased levels of acetyl CoA and eventually exceeds the oxidative capacity of the liver, thus acetyl CoA is shifted from the TCA cycle towards ketone synthesis. 2- Acetyl CoA is made into HMG-CoA via HMG-CoA Synthase (rate-limiting enzyme – only found in liver); HMG-CoA is then made into acetoacetate, b-hydroxybutyrate, and acetone (minor) and released into blood since liver cannot utilize them. Ketones are used by skeletal and cardiac muscle, the renal cortex, and other tissues (brain only uses during starvation). 3- Role of the Kidney a- Kidney, like liver, possesses the complete enzymatic apparatus for gluconeogenesis b- During brief periods of starvation, kidney’s rate of gluconeogenesis is 10% to that of the liver c- During prolonged starvation, ammoniagenesis increases due to increased acid load which accelerates its rate of gluconeo d- The principle gluconeogenic substrate is Gln which also provides the free NH3 (used to titrate excess H+ ions). 4- Hormonal Control During Starvation a- Insulin levels decrease (aids FA mobilization, gluconeogenesis and ketone production) b- Growth hormone increases (stimulates lypolysis) with a reduction in thyroid hormone (major energy conserving adaptation by decreasing basal metabolic rate and limiting muscle protein breakdown0 c- Glucagon (stimulates gluconeogenesis) Ý , then returns to postabsorptive levels concurrent with reduced glucose demand.